Cheyenne's life plays out in uneventful ways from day to day. He only leaves home to spend time with a friend he mentors like a daughter, or to visit that girls mother. His routine rarely varies. He tells his wife at one point that he thinks he's depressed. She seems to feel he's just bored.
The turning point in the film occurs when he gets news from the States that his father is dying. By the time he gets there, his father has passed. While he is at his childhood home, Cheyenne finds some of his fathers writings, and these set the stage for the rest of the movie.
The writings speak of the father's passion to find the man who was his main tormentor while he was a boy in Auschwitz. Cheyenne doesn't think his father loved him, but feels a deep responsibility to take on his cause none-the-less.
This quest takes Cheyenne on a journey across miles, and across time. The people he meets along the way changed him, and this movie changed me, as only the best films can. I continue to be haunted by the images in this film, and by its message. Never have I seen a character change so much, while still remaining true to his core values and commitment. .
The acting was strong in this film by everyone. Besides the aforementioned, Judd Hirsh, as Mordecai Midler the self-professed Nazi killer, and the great-grandson of the Nazi Cheyenne was looking for, played by Grant Goodman, were especially strong.
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